Nuclear Weapons Race Should Stop

ATOM Project Ambassador Karipek Kuyukov with PNND Council Member Viktor Rogalev and Kazakhstan Ambassador-at-Large Barlybai Sadykov at a TV media briefing for the Vienna Conference on the humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons.

The recent 3rd International Conference on Humanitarian Consequences of Nuclear Weapons has shown an encouraging trend – the growing realisation by the world community of the urgent need to take more robust steps towards nuclear disarmament. Even more encouraging was the fact that among the 158 countries represented in Vienna earlier in December were three nuclear weapon states. And what gives yet more hope is that the civil society globally has taken on a more active role in campaigning for the elimination of nuclear weapons and its role has not only been recognised but welcomed by governments throughout the world.

And it is about time. After the end of the Cold War, and the constant fear of the global nuclear war that accompanied it, we had all hoped that those days were in the past.

But in recent months, we have seen a disturbing revival of tensions between the West and Russia. There is talk of a return to Cold War brinkmanship and even development of new nuclear weapons. The slow but steady progress made towards ending the nuclear threat is in danger of being reversed. We should stop the nuclear arms race and step back from this precipice.

As leaders, diplomats and activists consider their options in these trying times, it is critical to remember the terrible human and environmental costs of nuclear weapons – costs which Kazakhstan still suffers every day.

Painting by Karipbek Kuyukov of a nuclear test in Kazakhstan

I was born 100 kilometres from the epicentre of the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site where the Soviet Union exploded more than 600 nuclear devices between 1949 and 1991. My parents and thousands of others would watch those bright and vast mushroom clouds as they filled the sky. The tests have had terrible physical consequences for the people who lived near them.

I came into this world without arms. People often ask me if I can be sure that radiation was the cause. If you had lived in my home town or region, you would not ask be asking me that question.

In the place where I grew up, I saw mothers and midwives shocked at the sight of their babies. My own mother didn’t see me for three days. When she did, she was in shock for a long time. She couldn’t even speak. But I wasn’t the only one. I saw families too embarrassed to show their children to the outside world, hiding them deep inside their homes and bringing them out only briefly for fresh air and sun.

With no arms, Karipbek uses his mouth to paint

I witnessed families and whole communities decimated by radiation-related cancers. As the United Nations confirms, more than 1.5 million people in Kazakhstan have suffered the effects of Soviet nuclear weapons testing.

The most terrifying fact about this story is that we didn’t understand the impact these explosions would have. We were taken completely by surprise – and this, I believe, is why it is so important that we use every opportunity to remind the world of the dangers of nuclear testing and the horror of the weapons themselves.

I saw so much tragedy and suffering in my homeland that I decided to do everything possible to ensure that my generation is the last to suffer such damage. I became an activist in an anti-nuclear weapons movement and found peace in expressing my pain through art.

Karipbek with some of his art in the historic US Senate Kennedy Caucus Room for a PNND event in Feb 2014

I use my feet and mouth to hold my brush and pour out in my own colours my inner world, calling on others to follow my cause. Today, I am an honorary ambassador of The ATOM Project, a global education and online petition campaign to encourage the global leadership needed to totally eliminate the nuclear “sword of Damocles” from above our heads.

My work with The ATOM Project, and before that with the Nevada-Semipalatinsk anti-nuclear movement, has served as a constant reminder that Kazakhstan was not alone in its suffering. I have witnessed the tears falling from the eyes of mothers from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I have participated in town hall meetings and protests at the Nevada test site in the United States. I have listened to the sad stories of the families of those who tested nuclear weapons for the British at Christmas Island. I have seen the fear in the eyes of parents across the world who are too ashamed to let others see their own children. I know that fear.

But over the last two decades we have seen progress. Even before Kazakhstan became fully independent, President Nursultan Nazarbayev shut down the Semipalatinsk test site in 1991 in defiance of then Soviet government in Moscow. On independence, our country voluntarily gave up the world’s fourth largest nuclear arsenal which we had inherited. Similar courageous decisions were taken by Ukraine, Belarus and South Africa who all renounced their nuclear weapons or

It has since been signed by 183 countries and ratified by 162. But the treaty cannot enter into force until it is signed and ratified by eight more countries: China, Egypt, India, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan and the United States. These countries must send a clear message to the world that nuclear weapons are part of our past, and have no place in our future. They must ensure that not one more person suffers from the consequences of nuclear testing and nuclear weapons use in the future.

I weep when I hear those calling for a return of nuclear weapons. I fear for our planet when I read news stories about countries re-building their nuclear arsenals. After all the horror, all the fear, and all the danger have we learnt nothing? How many more, like me, must suffer? I have a vision: to make sure that nuclear weapons programmes.

In 1996, a major step was taken when the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty was adopted by the United Nations. every single person around me knows what was concealed for decades – the consequences of developing nuclear weapons.

That is my mission. I don’t have arms. I can’t know what it feels like to grasp someone by the hand. But I do have feet with which I can paint. I have a voice that enables me to speak. For as long as I can, I will use whatever I have to tell the world about the catastrophic damage nuclear weapons have done to the planet and all who share it. And for as long as I can, I will encourage everybody to join us in our campaign for a total eradication of these most horrible weapons and for a world free from fear of nuclear annihilation.